Inequalities in UK can be detected using deep-learning image analysis

Scientific Reports

April 18, 2019

Social, economic, environmental and health inequalities within UK cities can be detected using a deep-learning computer method that analyses publicly available street imagery. The findings are published in Scientific Reports this week.

Detailed measurements of the substantial inequalities that exist within large cities like London are crucial for informing and evaluating policies that aim to reduce them. However, only a small number of countries have fully linked statistical datasets that allow for real-time measurements.

Esra Suel and colleagues used a deep-learning approach to train a computer programme to detect inequalities in four major UK cities - London, Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds - using publicly available street level images and government statistics. Trained on 525,860 images from London corresponding to 156,581 postcodes, the programme predicted outcomes with similar accuracy in the other three cities, after it had been fine-tuned with only 1% of additional images collected in the West Midlands, Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire.

The authors hypothesized that some features of cities and urban life, such as quality of housing and the living environment, have direct visual signals that a computer could recognize. These visual signals include building materials and disrepair, cars, or local shops. Combined with government statistics on outcomes such as housing conditions, mean income, or mortality and morbidity rates for one city, images may be used to train a computer programme to detect inequalities in other cities that lack statistical data.

The authors found that their computer programme was most successful at recognizing differences in quality of the living environment and mean income, and least successful for crime and self-reported health.